Ecology Vocabulary Chapter 2 pgs 35-57



Ecology Vocabulary Chapter 2 pgs 35-57

Abiotic Factors – Nonliving parts of an organism’s environment

e.g. Air, Temperature, Moisture, Light, Soil

Autotroph – An organism that uses light energy to create chemical

compounds a.k.a. Producers

Biological Community – A community comprised of interacting populations in

an environment

Biomass – The total weight of living matter at each trophic level

Biosphere – Layer of the Earth where organisms live

(Atmosphere to the bottom of the Ocean)

Biotic Factors – All living organisms that inhabit an environment

Carbon Cycle – A cycle which describes how carbon is used by plants to make

energy, animals eat the plants, and recycle the carbon as CO2

Carnivore – A heterotroph that eats only meat

Commensalism – A symbiotic relationship in which one species benefits and

the other species is neither harmed nor benefits

e.g. Clownfish and Sea Anemones

Consumers – See heterotroph

Decomposers – Break down the complex compounds of dead and decaying

plants and animals into simpler molecules that can be more

easily absorbed.

Ecology – The Study of interactions between organisms & their environment

Ecosystem – Interacting populations in a biological community along with the

abiotic factors

Food Chain – A model of showing how matter and energy are transferred

through an ecosystem

Food Web – A model that shows all the possible feeding relationships at

each trophic level in a community

Habitat – Where an organism lives out its life

Herbivore – A heterotroph that eats only plants

Heterotroph – An organism that can’t make its own food and feeds on other

organisms

Mutualism – A symbiotic relationship in which both species benefit

e.g. bees and flower pollen

Niche – The role or position a species has in its environment

Nitrogen Cycle – A cycle which describes how plants use nitrogen in the soil

to make proteins, herbivores or omnivore eat the plant and

use nitrogen to create new proteins, then excrete the

nitrogen in urine

Omnivore – An organism that eats plants and animals

Parasitism – A symbiotic relationship in which one species benefits and the

other is harmed e.g. Brown Headed Cowbirds and egg parasitism

Phosphorus Cycle – A cycle which describes how phosphorus, needed for

growth and development, travels through plants & animals

Population – A group of organisms of all the same species, which interbreed

and live in the same area at the same time. Populations can share

or compete for resources e.g. food, water, mates, shelter

Producers – Organisms that create their own food from the sun’s energy

Pyramid of Biomass – Each pyramid level represents the amount of biomass

required by the level above to meet its needs

Pyramid of Energy – Each pyramid level represents how much energy is

available within that trophic level. For each step

increase only 10% of the energy is available. The rest of

the energy is given off as heat.

Pyramid of Numbers – Each pyramid level represents the number of

organisms consumed by the level above it

Symbiosis – A close and permanent association between organisms of

different species

Trophic Level – A feeding step which describes what an organism eats

Water Cycle – How water is used and recycled in an ecosystem

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